Slippery surfaces, inspired by the functionality of trapping interfaces of specialized leaves of pitcher plants, have been widely used in self-cleaning, anti-icing, antifrost, and self-healing surfaces. They can be fabricated on metallic surfaces as well, presenting a more durable and low-maintenance anticorrosive surface on metals. However, the lack of studies on the durability of these slippery surfaces at high temperature prohibits their practical deployment in real industrial applications where thermal effects are critical and high temperature conditions are inevitable.
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